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Cinematograph and Films
The Cinematograph Films Act 1927 was passed in order to boost local production, requiring that cinemas show a certain percentage of British films.
The replacement Cinematograph Films Act 1938 provided incentives for UK companies to make fewer films of higher quality and, influenced by world politics, encouraged American investment and imports.
The Cinematograph Films Act of 1927 ( 17 & 18 Geo.
The Act was modified by the Cinematograph Films Act 1938 and further acts, and eventually repealed by the Films Act 1960.
* Cinematograph Films Act 1927 at BOPCRIS
# REDIRECT Cinematograph Films Act 1927
He was chairman of the Cinematograph Films Council and a Governor and later, Vice Chairman of the Board of Governors, of the London School of Economics.
After only one production, Stranglehold ( 1931 ), the studio was acquired by Warner Brothers to turn out so-called " quota quickies "-British-made films which fulfilled a legal quota ( created by the Cinematograph Films Act 1927 ) before American-made films could be shown.

Cinematograph and Act
Further under the Cinematograph Act, the district magistrate is the licencing authority in his jurisdiction.
In the United Kingdom, for example, this requirement was introduced in the Cinematograph Act 1909, and effectively prevented the projectionist from also carrying out a public-facing role.
The Eady Levy came into effect on 9 September 1950 but was not established on a statutory basis until its incorporation in the Cinematograph Film Act of 1957.

Cinematograph and 1927
In 1927, the British Government, in order to promote the market in India for British films over American ones, formed the Indian Cinematograph Enquiry Committee.

Cinematograph and introduced
Formerly known as Watson's Hotel, it was the site where films were introduced to India with a screening of the Lumiere Brothers Cinematograph in 1896.

Cinematograph and production
Bergman then decided to shoot the film in Swedish and not in English like his previous film The Touch ( 1971 film ), and to finance Cries and Whispers through his own production company, Cinematograph.

Cinematograph and films
The Vitascope and the Lumière Brothers ' Cinematograph were first presented in Japan in March 1897, and Lumière cameramen were the first to shoot films in Japan .< ref > Moving pictures, however, were not an entirely new experience for the Japanese because of their rich tradition of pre-cinematic devices such as gentō ( utsushi-e ) or the magic lantern.
However, the competing Lumière Brothers Cinematograph had already exhibited different films in Montreal on June 27, 1896.
* The Standard Cinematograph Type 2709 hand-cranked camera ( used in early silent films, it was so expensive that only Charlie Chaplin and three other people owned one.

Cinematograph and film
In 1919, his first job in the film industry was as an assistant cinematographer at the Nippon Katsudou Shashin Kabushiki-kaisha ( Nippon Cinematograph Company or Kokkatsu for short ) in Kyoto, which later became better known as Nikkatsu.
In 1974, following an earlier-than-normal TV screening of the film on BBC TV, which broke a gentlemen's agreement allowing a ' window ' of theatrical distribution before any TV screening, the UK's Cinematograph Exhibitors ' Association ( the theatrical distributors ' association ) recommended its members blacklist all future movies produced by Jules Buck.
Frenchman Louis Minier presented a film on a Cinematograph in a Café-Theatre on Saint Lawrence Boulevard.
The first Indian movie released in India was Shree pundalik a silent film in Marathi by Dadasaheb Torne on 18 May 1912 at ' Coronation Cinematograph ', Mumbai.
Cine film literally means ' moving ' film ; deriving from the Greek ' kine ' for motion ; it also has roots in the Anglo-French word Cinematograph, meaning moving picture.

Cinematograph and ).
British grips usually belong to BECTU ( Broadcasting Entertainment Cinematograph & Theatre Union ).

Films and Act
Moreover, the 1927 Films Act was up for renewal.
A little-known law called the Films Act bans the making, distribution and showing of films containing " wholly or partly, either partisan or biased references to, or comments on any political matter " in Singapore.
Then people can decide ", he said, adding that, as far as he knew, this was the first film that was considered political under the Films Act.
In 1997, under his former production company banner Carrie Films, Glover executive produced numerous films of first time directors including Pamm Malveaux's neo-noir short film Final Act starring Joe Morton, which aired on the Independent Film Channel.
A documentary made by film maker Martyn See about his 17 years as a political prisoner in Singapore was banned by the Board of Film Censors under the Films Act, which prohibit its possession and distribution.
Lionsgate was originally known as IMI Computer Corp. on May 26, 1986 and later known as Beringer Gold Corp. Beringer Gold later was incorporated as Lions Gate Films under the Business Corporation Act in British Columbia and was founded on July 3, 1997 by Frank Giustra, a Canadian investment banker hoping to capitalize on the growing film industry in his home town.
It was established under Section 76 of the Films, Videos, and Publications Classification Act 1993 ( FVPC Act ), replacing various film classification acts, including the Indecent Publications Tribunal.
* The Censorship of Films Act, 1923 was an act " to provide for the official censoring of cinematographic pictures and for other matters connected therewith ".
It was amended by the Censorship of Films ( Amendment ) Act, 1925, in connection with advertisements for films.
It was amended by the Censorship of Films ( Amendment ) Act, 1930 to extend the legislation to " vocal or other sounds " accompanying pictures.
# redirectCinematograph Films Act 1927

Films and 1927
* New Moon, 1940, based on Sigmund Romberg's 1927 Broadway hit, became one of Eddy's most popular films, although in 1978 it was included in the book The Fifty Worst Films of All Time.
Films shown in roadshow format before 1953 included silent epics such as The Birth of a Nation ( 1915 ), Intolerance ( 1916 ), The Covered Wagon ( 1923 ), The Hunchback of Notre Dame ( 1923 ), The Ten Commandments ( 1923 ), Ben-Hur ( 1925 ), The Big Parade ( 1925 ), and other films such as The Phantom of the Opera ( 1925 ), the first Oscar winner Wings ( 1927 ), the very first feature length part-talkie The Jazz Singer ( 1927 ), the silent film Chicago ( 1927 ) ( based on the play that inspired the Kander and Ebb Broadway musical and Oscar-winning film ), Show Boat ( 1929 ) ( a part-talkie based not on the 1927 stage musical but on Edna Ferber's original novel from which the musical was adapted ), The Desert Song ( 1929 ), Rio Rita ( also 1929 ), Cecil B. DeMille's The Sign of the Cross ( 1932 ), the all-star Oscar winning Grand Hotel ( 1932 ), the Oscar-winning biopic The Great Ziegfeld ( 1936 ), the classic films Lost Horizon ( 1937 ), Gone with the Wind ( 1939 ), Fantasia ( 1940 ), For Whom the Bell Tolls ( 1943 ) and The Song of Bernadette ( 1943 ), the wartime tear-jerker Since You Went Away ( 1944 ), Samuel Goldwyn's Oscar-winning postwar epic The Best Years of Our Lives ( 1946 ), the flamboyant Western Duel in the Sun ( also 1946 ), and the biopic Joan of Arc starring Ingrid Bergman ( 1948 ), as well as some other DeMille epics, such as Samson and Delilah ( 1949 ).
* Films Of The Year ( 1927 )
* Films of the Year, 1927 – 1928 ( 1929
Category: Films set in 1927
The Jazz Singer is a 1980 American drama film and a remake of the 1927 classic The Jazz Singer, released by EMI Films and United Artists.
Samuel Lloyd Spence ( born 1927 ) is an American soundtrack composer best known for his work with NFL Films.

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